Appellant, an uninsured Utah motorist who was involved in an
accident and whose license was suspended, attacks Utah's Motor
Vehicle Safety Responsibility Act as not affording the procedural
due process required by
Bell v. Burson, 402 U.
S. 535. However, although there is plainly a substantial
question whether the statutory scheme, on its face, affords the
procedural due process required by
Bell v. Burson, here,
where a state court stayed the suspension order pending completion
of judicial review and conducted a hearing at which appellant was
given an opportunity to present evidence and cross-examine
witnesses, there was no denial of procedural due process.
26 Utah 2d 128,
485 P.2d 1404,
affirmed.
PER CURIAM.
Appellant, a Utah motorist, was involved in a collision. Both
drivers and a police officer who investigated the accident filed
accident reports with Utah's Department of Public Safety as
required by the Utah Motor Vehicle Safety Responsibility Act.
Without affording appellant a hearing on fault, and based solely on
the contents of the accident reports, the Director of the Financial
Responsibility Division determined that there was a reasonable
possibility that appellant was at fault. Appellant did not carry
liability insurance, and was unable to post security to show
financial responsibility. The Director therefore suspended her
license. A Utah District Court sustained the Director, and the
Supreme Court of Utah affirmed. 26 Utah 2d 128,
485 P.2d 1404
(1971).
Page 404 U. S. 26
The proceedings were authorized under Utah Code Ann.
§§ 41-12-2(b) and 41-35 (1953). Appellant attacks the
statutory scheme as not affording the procedural due process
required by our decision in
Bell v. Burson, 402 U.
S. 535 (1971). We there held that the Georgia version of
a motor vehicle responsibility law was constitutionally deficient
for failure to afford the uninsured motorist procedural due
process. We held that, although a determination that there was a
reasonable possibility that the motorist was at fault in the
accident sufficed, "before the State may deprive [him] of his
driver's license and vehicle registration," the State must provide
"a forum for the determination of the question" and a "meaningful.
. .
hearing appropriate to the nature of the case.'"
Id. at 402 U. S. 541,
402 U. S. 542.
Appellant submits that Utah's statutory scheme falls short of these
requirements in two respects: (1) by not requiring a stay of the
Director's order pending determination of judicial review, the
scheme leaves open the possibility of suspension of licenses
without prior hearing; (2) in confining judicial review to whether
the Director's determination is supported by the accident reports,
and not affording the motorist an opportunity to offer evidence and
cross-examine witnesses, the motorist is not afforded a
"meaningful" hearing.
There is plainly a substantial question whether the Utah
statutory scheme, on its face, affords the procedural due process
required by
Bell v. Burson. This case does not, however,
require that we address that question. The District Court, in fact,
afforded this appellant such procedural due process. That court
stayed the Director's suspension order pending completion of
judicial review, and conducted a hearing at which appellant was
afforded the opportunity to present evidence and cross-examine
Page 404 U. S. 27
witnesses. Both appellant and the Director testified at that
hearing. The testimony of the investigating police officer would
also have been heard except that appellant's service of a subpoena
upon him to appear was not timely under the applicable court rules.
The judgment of the Utah Supreme Court is
Affirmed.